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The Changing Face of VA: Opportunities in Women’s Health Research

The Changing Face of VA: Opportunities in Women’s Health Research . Patty Hayes, Ph.D. Chief Consultant, Women Veterans Health Strategic Health Care Group December 2008. Roadmap. Changing Demographics Underutilization of VA by Women Fragmented Primary Care Quality differences

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The Changing Face of VA: Opportunities in Women’s Health Research

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  1. The Changing Face of VA: Opportunities in Women’s Health Research Patty Hayes, Ph.D. Chief Consultant, Women Veterans Health Strategic Health Care Group December 2008

  2. Roadmap • Changing Demographics • Underutilization of VA by Women • Fragmented Primary Care • Quality differences • Redesigning Primary Care for Women Veterans • Comprehensive Primary Care • Post-Deployment Health Issues • Outstanding Opportunities for Researchers

  3. Where are we and where is Women Veterans Health going?

  4. Expanding Population • The number of women veterans is growing rapidly. • Because of the large number of women on active duty and entering military service, the percentage of female veterans is projected to increase. • from 7.7 percent in 2008 • to 10.0 percent in 2018 • to 14.3 percent in 2033 • High utilization by women who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom & Enduring Freedom (OIF-OEF) • Over 102,126 Female OIF-OEF Veterans • 44.2% of women enroll, 43.8% use from 2-10 visits

  5. Women Veteran Trends

  6. Women Active Duty Service Personnel by Branch of Service (Sept 07)

  7. Women Veterans Using VA

  8. Women Veterans Are Younger • Average age of VA users • Female veteran = 48 • Male veteran = 61 • Among women veterans returning from OEF/OIF: • 85.5% are below age 40 • 58.9% are between ages 20-29 VA Healthcare Utilization Among 94,010 Female OEF/OIF Veterans through 1st Qtr. FY 2008 Environmental Epidemiology Service

  9. All market penetration 2007 All living male veterans: 22% All living women veterans: 15% (255,374 users/1,744,580 living women veterans) Women Veterans:Health Care • Traditionally, Women Veterans have under-utilized VA Health care • majority receive health care outside VA • Utilization data indicate current models of care delivery present barriers to women veterans using VA

  10. Women Veterans Are Younger • Average age of VA users • Female veteran = 48 • Male veteran = 61 • Among women veterans returning from OEF/OIF: • 85.5% are below age 40 • 58.9% are between ages 20-29 VA Healthcare Utilization Among 94,010 Female OEF/OIF Veterans through 1st Qtr. FY 2008 Environmental Epidemiology Service

  11. Needs of women veterans • Clinics to serve the needs of young, working women • Access, flexibility of hours, use of technology • Address sexual health, family planning • Many have childcare responsibilities and eldercare demands • Many are employed, difficult to get time off for appointments • Adjustment and depression issues • Age related health effects • Cardiac risk, obesity and diabetes, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, breast and cervical cancer screening, osteoporosis screening

  12. Fragmented Primary Care • Women’s general health care and gender-specific health care often handled separately • 67% of VA sites provide primary care in “multi-visit, multi-provider model:” primary care at one visit and gender-specific primary care at another visit. • Too few primary care physicians trained in women’s health • Inconvenient access to gender-specific care • Mental health care separate from primary care

  13. Gender Differences in Quality • Quality is high compared to the private sector • Quality challenges - Significant gender differences in clinical prevention measures and mental health screenings. • Most are similar to the private sector • Cardiac risk measures lower for women • Some are opposite the private sector: • Influenza Immunizations- lower for women than men in VA

  14. Data on Quality and Delivery of Care Source: VA Hospital Quality Report 2008:

  15. Where is Women’s Veteran Health going?

  16. Redesigning Primary Care Delivery for Women Veterans • Increase focus on quality of care issues and comprehensive longitudinal care for women veterans • Gender specific care is primary care. • Defining Comprehensive Primary Care for Women Veterans: • Availability of complete primary care from one primary care provider at one site. • The primary care provider should, in the context of a longitudinal relationship, fulfill all primary care needs, including acute and chronic illness, gender-specific, preventive, and mental health care.

  17. Comprehensive Primary Care for Women Veterans • Enormous undertaking by the VA • Frame shift in the way care is delivered • Our goal is to be a model of care for the nation • The research opportunities are tremendous

  18. Accurately represent the women’s veteran population through data and analysis (demographics, epidemiology, health status, quality of care, etc). • Provide Ongoing data by gender – • Performance measures analyzed by VISN • Analyze performance data points—OQP gathering data on reasons for differences in performance • Best practices and innovations— • Review high outliers • Clinical and performance improvement grants

  19. Women Veterans Health: Additional New Initiatives • Implementation of risk reduction in prescribing medications • Contraception when appropriate • Informed consent for teratogenic drugs • Sex is a vital sign- provider/patient discussion of sexual health

  20. Post-Deployment health in women: • High utilization by women who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom & Enduring Freedom (OIF-OEF) • Over 102,126 Female OIF-OEF Veterans • 44.2% of women enroll, 43.8% use from 2-10 visits • We don’t understand the reasons for this high utilization among this group • This group is a large and rapidly expanding cohort with unique needs

  21. Post-Deployment health in women: • Menstruation issues • Tracking use of contraceptives • Consequences of continuous use • Pregnancy and pregnancy outcomes, including miscarriages • Infertility • Urinary tract infections • Anecdotal reports of high rates • More chronic presentations • Heat, poor hydration, less access to toileting and hygiene • Possible Exposures • Concerns about toxic substances, animal “exposures” • Evaluation for Depleted uranium exposure from munitions and shielding • Injury patterns

  22. Readjustment issues • Transitioning to home and “mom”role • Differences for active duty, guard, reserve • Attachment disruption and parenting issues • Social supports network near military bases vs Guard, Reserve community based • Transitioning active duty “job” roles to private sector: a step-down for women? • Readjustment vs PTSD Diagnosis

  23. Summary • Shrinking total veterans population but a doubling of women veterans using VHA for their healthcare • Increasing recognition of women veterans’ unique and complex health needs—gear up for influx of younger women veterans • Improve Quality performance for women-seek best strategies and implement change • Increase attention to comprehensive view of women’s health—beyond reproductive health issues • Redesign primary care service delivery for women • Understand post-deployment health issues for women • Tremendous research opportunities

  24. Thank you for your interest in Women’s Health Research Questions?

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